Fawn Mckay
Fawn McKay was born 15 September 1915 in Ogden Utah. Fawn MCKAY, raised in the Mormon Church's First Family employed her creative talents and skills in researching to produce the intriguing biographical psycho-historical study of Joseph Smith. Published in 1945, under the name No Man is a Master of My History, she used both. It was derived from the sermon title delivered by Joseph Smith in 1844. He shocked his hearers with his words: "You are not my friend and have not heard my thoughts. Nobody has known about my past. I'm not able to tell my story. Fawn 29, a woman of 29 years old, has written: "Since that moment of candor, at least three writers have taken on the task." Many have mocked and denigrated the man, and others have tried to pinpoint the issue. There isn't a problem the case that there's not enough documentation but they're rather contradictory. This is the task--sifting out the firsthand evidence from the third-party inconsistencies and integrating Mormon-related narratives into a coherent theology. It is both interesting as well as eye-opening. Such was the task to which Fawn Brodie put her professional energy into. Thaddeus S. Stevens became immortalized through her work and the fruits of her study. The Scourge of south (1959) The Devil Drives. Thomas Jefferson. The intimate Histories (1974), and Richard Nixon.





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